National
Review Online
Monday,
May 22, 2023
‘As the
world goes mad, Florida represents a refuge of sanity and a citadel of
normalcy.” This statement by Governor Ron DeSantis could easily have been
uttered in 2020 during the height of the coronavirus response. But in
fact, DeSantis said this on Wednesday, while signing the “Let Kids Be
Kids” package, a slew of bills designed to curtail LGBT overreach in the
Sunshine State.
There is
no shortage of examples to illustrate the madness to which DeSantis is
referring. Gender clinicians openly promote their cavalier attitude to “top
surgery” (i.e., breast amputation), advertising the procedure to young
prospective patients on TikTok. Drag queens strip and pole-dance in front of
audiences made up of children, much to the delight of grown men and women.
Pornographic materials too obscene to detail here are distributed in school
libraries.
Last
week, at the 2023 GLAAD Media Awards, White House press secretary Karine
Jean-Pierre, speaking of medicalized gender transition, said that American
children “belong to all of us.” This view is reflected in the Democratic
proclivity for undermining parental rights.
Progressive
activists push for state laws — even constitutional amendments — guaranteeing
minors’ access to sterilizing cross-sex hormones, the removal of healthy body
parts, and abortion. California governor Gavin Newsom has moved to facilitate
child gender-transition tourism from other states. And all while an increasing
number of youths and young adults (detransitioners) share heartbreaking
testimonies of how quickly and easily their bodies were maimed by clinicians
before they had a chance to accept themselves.
According
to the Human Rights Campaign, there are now 19 states and counting where
so-called “gender affirming” clinical malpractice is outlawed. The same day as
DeSantis’s bill-signing, the Texas legislature voted to outlaw medicalized
transitions for minors. The law will now head to Governor Greg Abbott’s desk
for signature.
Notwithstanding accusations
to the contrary, this conservative fight is defensive in nature. The Texas law,
Senate Bill 14, prohibits doctors from surgically removing healthy body parts
or prescribing sterilizing drugs in an attempt to alter a child’s sex
characteristics. The Florida health bill bans these drugs and procedures
outright, requires “adult patients who are receiving these medications to be
informed about the dangers and irreversible nature of these procedures and to
give written informed consent,” and makes it easier for patients to sue doctors
for damages. These bills wisely refrain from taking the more drastic steps some
conservatives have mentioned, such as blocking adults from altering their
sexual characteristics.
Under
Florida’s bill package, students will not be required to declare their pronouns
in school, nor will they be “instructed” in LGBT issues in pre-K through eighth
grade. It will also be illegal for businesses to knowingly admit a minor to a
sexually explicit, adult performance. Various public institutions including
schools, prisons, and public buildings will be required to provide either
sex-segregated or single-stall unisex bathrooms and changing facilities. And in
the interest of protecting female athletics, the state will oversee the Florida
High School Athletic Association.
Three
years ago, Governor DeSantis refused to succumb to the global panic of closing
schools — the catastrophic educational effects of which we’re only beginning to
understand. Today, he’s holding his nerve in rejecting another social and
medical experiment, one with similarly wide-reaching consequences. Conservatives,
take heed.
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